The Chevron Championship marks the start of major season for the women. Memorial Park Golf Course in Houston will host the major for the first time this season from April 23-26.
We will not only see a major champion crowned on Sunday, but also a bigger purse awarded, a controversial jump into a pool, and a potential debate about whether a player achieved the career Grand Slam.
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Here are 10 storylines to watch as The Chevron Championship unfolds this week.
First major of the season
Unlike men’s golf, which has four majors, women’s golf currently has five. The Chevron Championship is the first major of the season. Following it are the U.S. Women’s Open (June), the KPMG Women’s PGA Championship (June), The Amundi Evian Championship (July), and the AIG Women’s Open (July).
The Chevron Championship has been a major, albeit with different names, since 1983. Before Chevron became the title sponsor, it held the names of Nabisco Dinah Shore (1983-99), Nabisco Championship (2000-01), Kraft Nabisco Championship (2002-14), and ANA Inspiration (2015-21).
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Welcome [back] to Memorial Park
Memorial Park is playing host to The Chevron Championship for the first time this season.
It was announced in January that the tournament would move from The Club at Carlton Woods in The Woodlands, Texas – where it was hosted the past three years – to Houston’s Memorial Park. The course also hosts the PGA Tour’s Texas Children’s Houston Open, which saw an emotional win from Gary Woodland less than a month ago. This move gets the major closer to title sponsor Chevron’s corporate headquarters while reaffirming the LPGA’s commitment to the Houston area.
Memorial Park is set up approximately 660 yards shorter than it was for the men a month ago, but it will still play long, especially after being soaked by rain earlier in the week. With the men on the PGA Tour playing here regularly, some players may get advice from their counterparts. World No. 5 Hannah Green even has David Buhai on her bag this week; he looped for Karl Vilips last month at Memorial Park. Minjee Lee, meanwhile, is able to get some pointers from her brother, Min Woo, who finished T-3 at this year’s Houston Open.
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A major purse increase
Tournament officials announced Tuesday a $1 million increase to The Chevron Championship purse over last year. It will now be $9 million, with this year’s winner receiving $1,350,000. The purse at the Chevron has increased by $6 million since title sponsor Chevron came on in 2022.
In addition to the purse increase, players will be offered a few other perks at Memorial Park, including a missed-cut stipend of $10,000 to all players who fail to make it to the weekend. Additionally, all players will be provided with their own courtesy car. Most players will receive a Cadillac, but past champions will get the option to drive a Bentley. Past champions also get access to a private champions locker room and are invited to stay for free at the Post Oak Hotel – a five-star hotel and spa in the area.
Poppie’s Pond becomes a pool
In 1988, while the Chevron was still being hosted at Mission Hills, a tradition was establish by that year’s champion, Amy Alcott, when she jumped into the pond surrounding the 18th green to celebrate her win. The tradition didn’t pick up steam for a few years, but the pond was endearingly named “Poppie’s Pond” in 2006, in honor of then-tournament director Terry Wilcox’s nickname. When the tournament moved to The Woodlands, the lake between the ninth and 18th holes was made suitable for swimming — including installing netting to protect against alligators — so the tradition could continue. The safety of the water feature at The Club at Carlton Woods was called into question throughout the tournament’s tenure there.
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Yet another move has made the topic of “the jump” a headline once again. This year, a temporary, concrete-lined pool has been installed to encourage the continuation of the celebration. Memorial Park plans to install a man-made pond at the 18th green in time for the 2027 tournament, but the temporary pool has been a hot topic in the lead-up to the tournament. Questions have centered around the look of the pool, as well as the depth (4.5 feet) and whether the tradition is being unnecessarily forced since the move from Mission Hills.
And if you’re wondering, ‘What happens if a player hits their ball into the pool?’ Yes, they get free relief — another thing to debate.
Career Grand Slam… maybe?
The LPGA considers the women’s career Grand Slam as winning four of the five different majors during her career. If an athlete were to win all five majors, they would be considered to have completed the Super Career Grand Slam.
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Many news outlets don’t consider winning four of the five majors the career Grand Slam, remaining adamant that a player must win all five majors to achieve the feat. Still, in the LPGA’s eyes, In Gee Chun, Minjee Lee and Anna Nordqvist could complete the career Grand Slam with a win this weekend.
Top amateurs in the world descend on Houston
Eight amateurs will tee it up alongside the pros at Memorial Park, including the top four in the World Amateur Golf Ranking: No. 1 Kiara Romero, No. 2 Paula Martin Sampedro, No. 3 Andrea Revuelta and No. 4 Farah O’Keefe. Also playing in the top 10 are No. 7 Asterisk Talley, who suffered a devastating loss at the Augusta National Women’s Amateur earlier this month, and No. 8 Megha Ganne.
Can Korda win her third?
World No. 2 Nelly Korda has the opportunity to win the third major of her career and second at the Chevron this week. One would think with the way she has been playing, she’s got a good chance at it too.
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Korda has played four times on tour this season and finished no lower than second. She won her first outing in January at the Hilton Grand Vacations Tournament of Champions and has since finished solo second at the Fortinet Founders Cup and Ford Championship before finishing T-2 a couple weeks ago at the Aramco Championship.
Stacy Lewis takes a final bow at four months pregnant
Stacy Lewis is expected to play in her final LPGA event ever this week, saying farewell to the sport while four months pregnant with her second child.
The 41-year-old joined the LPGA Tour in 2009 and has 13 career wins, racking up 118 career top 10s, 184 career top 25s and $14.7 million in official career earnings. Lewis hasn’t played on tour since October of last year, when she finished T-32 at the Lotte Championship. In all, she made 16 starts and eight cuts in 2025 — what was supposed to be her farewell season.
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Lewis says being pregnant has helped her golf swing and pregnancy hormones have eased typical aches and pains, but she was planning to retire even before a surprise positive pregnancy test after three years of infertility and IVF.
A two-time major winner — including the 2011 edition of this tournament, then the Kraft Nabisco Championship — Lewis’ legacy extends beyond her resume. She has been an advocate for paid maternity leave and protections for fertility treatments on tour.
Lewis’ husband, Gerrod Chadwell, is the head coach for Texas A&M’s women’s golf team. He will be on her bag this week.
Hannah Green is on a tear
Australia’s Hannah Green is looking for her second major win this week (2019 Women’s PGA), and she is arguably the hottest player in the field. She has won four times since March 1: the HSBC Women’s World Championship, the Women’s Australian Open, the Australian WPGA Championship and last weekend’s JM Eagle LA Championship.
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As mentioned earlier, she’ll have a seasoned Memorial Park caddie on her bag in David Buhai, and with a crazy amount of momentum on her side, it could very well be Green vs. Korda in the final stretch on Sunday afternoon.
Playoff on the horizon?
Speaking of Sunday afternoon, will we see another playoff this year? Since 2015, The Chevron Championship has produced the most playoffs of the five women’s majors.
Six editions of the Chevron have gone to extra holes to decide the champion, including last year when Mao Saigo won in a five-way, sudden-death playoff. She birdied the par-5 18th at Carlton Woods to win the title.
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